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Friday, April 10, 2009

US Aid Ship Fights off Pirates

UPDATE 3: (10 APR 2009): Captain attempted escape, recaptured. Captain conducted antipiracy battle drills with crew. This thing is working out to have been a very bad day full of bad luck for the Pirates. I do hope this crew and captain get the $3 MIllion bonus that the insurance company would have otherwise paid the pirates.

UPDATE 2: (9 APR 2009): Crew relieved in placed by armed US Navy crew who will take ship to destination. Crew will to be given trip to families.

UPDATE: Most Recent reports (1430 hrs - 8 APR 2009) indicate Crew is holding one pirate while 3 pirates are holding the ship's captain in small boat off the ship.

Pirate Attack Foiled by Ship’s Crew, Defense Officials Say

By Gerry J. Gilmore, American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, April 8, 2009 – A ship taken by pirates off the coast of Somalia this morning is now presumed to be under the control of its crew again, Defense Department officials said.

The cargo ship Maersk Alabama was attacked by pirates early this morning and presumed hijacked, according to information provided by U.S. Naval Forces Central Command. The vessel was en route to Mombasa, Kenya, when it was assaulted about 300 miles off Somalia’s coast, officials said.

The Maersk Alabama is home-ported in Norfolk, Va., and has a crew of about 20 U.S. nationals,

John Reinhart, president and CEO of the ship’s owner, Maersk Line Ltd., told reporters today.

Reinhart said his company is contacting the crew’s family members. He declined to confirm the ship’s retaking by its crew, or to release the names of crew members.

The Maersk Alabama’s crewmembers were trained to deal with pirate attacks, Reinhart said.

Pentagon officials noted there were four would-be hijackers, at least one of whom was captured by the ship’s crew.

Pirates who attack merchant ships traveling off the coast of Somalia are difficult to deter because of the large area in which they operate, according to U.S. Naval Forces Central Command.

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman told reporters today that he didn’t want to comment on possible actions that could be taken in response to the Maersk Alabama’s apparent hijacking.

However, Whitman said the piracy issue “is not going to be something that is solved in a purely military way or in international waters.”

“This is going to have to be something that is addressed broadly by the international community,” Whitman continued, “It’s going to have to be addressed diplomatically, militarily (and) legally.”

Pirates operating off the coast of Somalia have attacked five vessels over the past week, according to news reports, not including today’s attack on the Maersk Alabama.

Navy Vice Adm. William E. Gortney, commander of Combined Maritime Forces based in Bahrain that oversees anti-piracy efforts in the region, provided an updated advisory notice to regional merchant shipping in a news release issued yesterday.

“We synchronize the efforts of the naval forces deployed to the region,” Gortney said in the release. “However, as we have often stated, international naval forces alone will not be able to solve the problem of piracy at sea.”

Piracy “is a problem that starts ashore,” Gortney added.

And, despite the increased naval presence in the region, Gortney’s notice said, because of an area of water that’s four times the size of Texas, ships and aircraft are unlikely to be close enough to provide support to vessels under attack.

In view of the pirates’ activity, merchant mariners should be highly vigilant when traveling through Somalia’s coastal region, the release stated.

The release noted that a number of merchant vessels transiting the waters off Somalia have successfully employed evasive maneuvers and other defensive tactics to thwart attempted pirate attacks.

For example, a Panamanian-flagged vessel employed evasive maneuvers and fire hoses to thwart an attempted pirate attack, according to the release.

"There are fewer than 200 U.S.-flagged vessels in international waters, said Larry Howard, chair of the Global Business and Transportation Department at SUNY Maritime College in New York. " AP, APR 08, 2009

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US Aid Ship Fights off Pirates

UPDATE 3: (10 APR 2009): Captain attempted escape, recaptured. Captain conducted antipiracy battle drills with crew. This thing is working out to have been a very bad day full of bad luck for the Pirates. I do hope this crew and captain get the $3 MIllion bonus that the insurance company would have otherwise paid the pirates.

UPDATE 2: (9 APR 2009): Crew relieved in placed by armed US Navy crew who will take ship to destination. Crew will to be given trip to families.

UPDATE: Most Recent reports (1430 hrs - 8 APR 2009) indicate Crew is holding one pirate while 3 pirates are holding the ship's captain in small boat off the ship.

Pirate Attack Foiled by Ship’s Crew, Defense Officials Say

By Gerry J. Gilmore, American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, April 8, 2009 – A ship taken by pirates off the coast of Somalia this morning is now presumed to be under the control of its crew again, Defense Department officials said.

The cargo ship Maersk Alabama was attacked by pirates early this morning and presumed hijacked, according to information provided by U.S. Naval Forces Central Command. The vessel was en route to Mombasa, Kenya, when it was assaulted about 300 miles off Somalia’s coast, officials said.

The Maersk Alabama is home-ported in Norfolk, Va., and has a crew of about 20 U.S. nationals,

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